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31 Mar 2020, 9:40 am by Eugene Volokh
" Some students complained, and here is how the Dean responded: As some of you know, a number of students reached out yesterday to the Dean's Office about Professor Michael Curtis' use of the "n-word" when teaching Brandenburg v. [read post]
30 Mar 2020, 9:32 am by Dennis Crouch
Smith, Dean of Libraries at the University of Kansas On March 23, 2020, the Supreme Court announced a decision in one of the three copyright cases before it this term, Allen v. [read post]
30 Mar 2020, 9:19 am by Steven Boutwell
By Dean Cazenave, Blane Clark and Elisabeth Prescott Keenly aware of the enormous impact COVID-19 is having on small businesses throughout the country, in response, the Congress approved and on March 27, 2020, the President signed the “Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act” (the “CARES Act”). [read post]
25 Mar 2020, 3:29 am by SHG
Wake Forest University Law School Dean Jane Aiken sent an email to the entire law school “community”: Dear Wake Forest Law Community, As some of you know, a number of students reached out yesterday to the Dean’s Office about Professor Michael Curtis’ use of the “n-word” when teaching Brandenburg v. [read post]
23 Mar 2020, 9:00 pm by Austin Sarat
Instead, 1968 marked the first year of an unofficial moratorium on executions in the lead-up to the Supreme Court’s 1972 Furman v Georgia decision. [read post]
14 Mar 2020, 8:02 am by Elliot Setzer
Circuit ruling in Committee on the Judiciary v. [read post]
9 Mar 2020, 4:00 am by Gary P. Rodrigues
Then in 1973 the Supreme Court of Canada case Calder v. [read post]
3 Mar 2020, 9:01 pm by Vikram David Amar
Although the Second Circuit may have gotten to the right legal result (given the constraints under which lower courts operate), there is one aspect of its reasoning that I believe reflects a common and dangerous misunderstanding (an overreading, actually) of the highly contested Obamacare ruling, National Federation of Independent Business v. [read post]
2 Mar 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
  When the working class threatened the interests of robber barons in late nineteenth century, for example, the illiterate and semiliterate poor were kept from the polls through literacy tests and poll taxes, not unlike the restrictive voter identification laws introduced after the Shelby County v. [read post]
28 Feb 2020, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
Tokaji is Associate Dean for Faculty and Ebersold Professor of Constitutional Law at The Ohio State University - Moritz College of Law. [read post]